Prosecutor general defends death penalty

“They are fighting for a person who took innocent lives,” Mr. Kanyuk said.

“The
wailing has started, but what should we do to a person who cut off his
victim’s head, put it into a bag and carried it around?” he said. “What
should we do to a person who stabbed his victim 122 times?”

Mr.
Kanyuk stressed that it was wrong to “defend and promote criminals.”
Some people have gone so far as to accuse Belarusian authorities of
imposing death sentences to have more trump cards in their game with
Europe, he said.

Mr. Kanyuk also defended a bill that provides
for confiscating motor vehicles from drivers if they are caught drunk
behind the wheel for the second time within a year. The introduction of
this penalty would be “just the first stage,” he warned, adding that it
was time to stop caring for criminals more than for their victims.

Belarus
is the only country in Europe and the post-Soviet region where the
death sentence remains a sentencing option and prisoners are executed.
The European Union and other international organizations have repeatedly
called on the Belarusian government to abolish the death penalty or
declare a moratorium on it. Authorities refuse to say how many people
are sentenced to death and executed in Belarus. It is known that two
young men were executed in Belarus last year over the deadly 2011 subway
bombing in Minsk.

At least three people have been sentenced to death in Belarus this year.

On
April 24, 2013, a panel of the Mahilyow Regional Court imposed the
death penalty on an inmate of a Mahilyow prison for murdering a cellmate
who had lost a game of dominoes to him, with the stake being life.

On
June 12, a judge of the Hrodna Regional Court sentenced a young man to
death for brutally murdering his wife and her alleged lover in Hrodna in
August 2012.

Two days later, a judge of the Homyel Regional
Court imposed the death penalty on a man who murdered a young woman,
stabbing her 102 times in the head, neck, chest, arms and legs with a
knife.